Corruption continues to be a significant governance concern in Southeast Asia, eroding economic development, political legitimacy, and social equality. Countries including Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, and Singapore exhibit varied institutional strategies for anti-corruption governance, encompassing both highly centralized enforcement methods and hybrid democratic accountability frameworks. This doctoral-level policy research paper analyzes institutional design, public procurement reform, digital transparency instruments, and financial accountability frameworks throughout the area. It synthesizes comparative political economy, institutional theory, and public administration paradigms to delineate reform trajectories suited to growing democracies and hybrid regimes. The report finishes with a policy framework highlighting legal change, technological integration, citizen monitoring, and regional collaboration.
Shah Mohammad Omer Faruqe Jubaer (Thu,) studied this question.